Test if something appears to be a 6to4 address
Version added: 2.2.0
- This plugin checks if the provided value is a valid 6to4 address
#### Simple examples
- name: Check if 2002:c0a8:6301:1::1 is a valid 6to4 address
ansible.builtin.set_fact:
data: "{{ '2002:c0a8:6301:1::1' is ansible.utils.ipv6_sixtofour }}"
# TASK [Check if 2002:c0a8:6301:1::1 is a valid 6to4 address] ****************************
# ok: [localhost] => {
# "ansible_facts": {
# "data": true
# },
# "changed": false
# }
- name: Check if 2001:c0a8:6301:1::1 is not a valid 6to4 address
ansible.builtin.set_fact:
data: "{{ '2001:c0a8:6301:1::1' is not ansible.utils.ipv6_sixtofour }}"
# TASK [Check if 2001:c0a8:6301:1::1 is not a valid 6to4 address] ************************
# ok: [localhost] => {
# "ansible_facts": {
# "data": true
# },
# "changed": false
# }
- name: Check if helloworld is not a valid 6to4 address
ansible.builtin.set_fact:
data: "{{ 'helloworld' is not ansible.utils.ipv6_sixtofour }}"
# TASK [Check if helloworld is not a valid 6to4 address] *********************************
# ok: [localhost] => {
# "ansible_facts": {
# "data": true
# },
# "changed": false
# }
Common return values are documented here, the following are the fields unique to this test:
Key | Returned | Description |
---|---|---|
data
-
|
If jinja test satisfies plugin expression
true If jinja test does not satisfy plugin expression
false |
- Priyam Sahoo (@priyamsahoo)
Hint
Configuration entries for each entry type have a low to high priority order. For example, a variable that is lower in the list will override a variable that is higher up.